das skilaufen

listen to the pronunciation of das skilaufen
German - Turkish

Definition of das skilaufen in German Turkish dictionary

Skilaufen
kayakçılık
English - Turkish

Definition of das skilaufen in English Turkish dictionary

skiing
{f} kay

Gelecek ay Zao'da kaymaya gidebilirim. - I may go skiing at Zao next month.

Kayak yaparken bacağını kırdı. - He broke his leg skiing.

skiing
kayarak
skiing
ski
skiing
{i} kayak

Kayak yaparken bacağımı kırdım. - I broke my leg while skiing.

Kayak yaparken bacağını kırdı. - He broke his leg skiing.

skiing
{i} kayakçılık

Balıkçılık, avcılık, yürüyüş ve kayakçılık popülerdir. - Fishing, hunting, hiking and skiing are popular.

Bir uzmana göre, ne dağcılık ne de kayakçılık tehlikelidir. - According to an expert, neither mountaineering nor skiing is dangerous.

skiing
{i} kayak yapma

O Hokkaido'da kayak yapmaya gitti. - He went skiing in Hokkaido.

Kışın sık sık kayak yapmaya gittim. - I often went skiing in the winter.

German - English
skiing
Present participle of ski
A group of sports utilizing skis as primary equipment
{i} act of gliding across snow or water on skis; sport of gliding across snow or water on skis
a sport in which participants must travel on skis
the sport of moving down hills, across land in the snow, or on water wearing skis. Sport and mode of transportation involving moving over snow on a pair of long flat runners (skis) attached to shoes or boots. Skiing was born in northern Europe; the oldest skis, found in Russia, are some 6,000 years old. The earliest skis were often short and broad. The first written references to skiing come from the Han dynasty (206 BC-AD 220) and describe skiing in northern China. Skiing was used in warfare in Scandinavia from the 13th century or earlier to the 20th century. The earliest mode of skiing developed into the sport now called cross-country skiing. Competitive cross-country skiing began in Norway in the 1840s and had reached California by the 1860s. Improvements on primitive bindings 1860 led to greater popularity of recreational skiing. Ski-jumping competitions date from the 1870s. Downhill skiing was limited by the need to climb the hill before or after skiing down; the building of ski lifts began in the 1930s. Skis were originally made of a single piece of wood, usually hickory; laminated construction began in the 1930s, plastic running surfaces were introduced in the 1950s, and no wood has been used in the construction of downhill skis for several decades. The business of skiing began its serious growth in the 1930s and became explosive in the 1950s and '60s; huge resorts now dot the Austrian, Swiss, and Italian Alps, the Rocky Mountains, and other mountainous regions. See also Alpine skiing. Alpine skiing cross country skiing Nordic skiing
the sport of skating down a hill with skis
first-person singular of ski
das skilaufen
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